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New Rules Make It More Difficult to Get a Reverse Mortgage

February 2nd, 2015

The federal government has tightened the rules regarding reverse mortgages, making it harder for some seniors to get these types of mortgages and reducing the amount of their home’s value that they can tap. The new rules are an effort to strengthen the federal Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) program, which insures almost all reverse mortgages and which has seen default rates rise.

A reverse mortgage allows a homeowner who is at least 62 years old to use the equity in his or her home to obtain a loan that does not have to be repaid until the homeowner moves, sells, or dies. In a reverse mortgage, the homeowner receives a sum of money from the lender, usually a bank, based largely on the value of the house, the age of the borrower, and current interest rates. Seniors sometimes use the loans to pay for long-term care.

Hale Ball Carlson Baumgartner Murphy PLC

Loretta Morris Williams is a certified elder law attorney by the National Elder Law Foundation. Ms. Williams was admitted to the Council of Advanced Practitioners, National Academy of Elder Law Attorneys (NAELA) in 2012. She serves as President of the Virginia Academy of Elder Law Attorneys. Ms. Willia...

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Hale Ball Carlson Baumgartner Murphy PLC

Jean Galloway Ball is certified in Elder Law by the National Elder Law Foundation. She is a 1977 honors graduate of the National Law Center, George Washington University, and she did her undergraduate work at the University of California at Berkeley, graduating Phi Beta Kappa in 1971.
She is admitted to practice in Vir...

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Margaret A. O'Reilly, PC

Margaret A. O’Reilly is an estate planning and elder law attorney with over thirty-five years of legal experience. Attorney O’Reilly graduated from Duke University with a degree in psychology, and received her law degree from Northeastern University School of Law in Boston, Massachusetts. For over 15 y...

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The loans are expensive and controversial. In recent years there have been complaints over problems with reverse mortgages, including large costs, aggressive marketing techniques, and the danger of default if insurance and property taxes aren't paid on time. Encouraged by lenders, more homeowners withdrew the entire loan amount all at once, straining the HECM program’s reserve funds.

The government began addressing these problems last year by eliminating one of the most popular types of reverse mortgage, the HECM Standard fixed-rate, lump-sum reverse mortgage. The new rules make changes to who can take out loans, the amount they borrow, and the pricing, among other things:

Who can borrow money. Borrowers are now required to undergo a financial assessment to ensure they can make insurance and property tax payments. If a lender determines you are a risk to default on insurance or tax payments, you may be required to set aside money to make those payments.

Amount you can borrow. Before the new rules, homeowners had the choice of two programs: HECM standard, which allowed for higher loans, and HECM saver, which had smaller loans and smaller fees. The government has merged these two programs, and the new maximum loan amount is about 10-15 percent less than in the standard, but slightly higher than in the saver.

Fees. Previously, the upfront fee to take out an HECM standard was 2 percent of the property's value, while a HECM saver was .01 percent. The new fee is .5 percent on smaller loans, but individuals who take out a loan that is more than 60 percent of their home's value will pay a 2.5 percent fee.

First-year limit. During the first year of a loan, homeowners can only withdraw up to 60 percent of the loan amount.

"The changes really put the product on track as a long-term financial planning tool as opposed to a crisis management tool," Ramsey Alwin, senior director of economic security at the National Council on Aging, told The New York Times.